St Lawrence's church, Whitchurch

St Lawrence's, Whitchurch

St Lawrence's in 2005
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Website http://www.little-stanmore.org/
Architecture
Style Baroque
Administration
Diocese London
Province Canterbury
Clergy
Archbishop Justin Welby
Rector Fr Paul Michael Reece

St. Lawrence, Whitchurch, is a Church of England parish church church in Little Stanmore in the London Borough of Harrow, England. The building is Grade I listed.[1] It retains a stone tower dating from ca. 1360, but the main body of the building was constructed in the eighteenth century in Baroque style.

History

The original medieval church was reconstructed by the architect John James, working for a wealthy client James Brydges. Brydges, who was later 1st Duke of Chandos, started rebuilding the church and Cannons, his nearby country house, around the time he succeeded his father as ninth Baron Chandos in 1714. Brydges had a habit of changing his architect and in 1715 John James was replaced as architect for the house by James Gibbs, who may have been involved in the completion of the church prior to its reopening in 1716.

Brydges later constructed a private chapel in the house, but he continued to take a personal interest in the church, where he had a gallery for the use of himself and his entourage.[1] He had the right to nominate the minister, and chose John Theophilus Desaguliers FRS, who also served him as chaplain and engineering consultant. Towards the end of his life Brydges had lost much of his wealth, but in 1735 he had a mausoleum, designed by Gibbs, built next to the church.[2]

Description

The highly decorated interior of the church is unusual in England, Continental Baroque rather than English Baroque in style.

Decoration

The decorative painter Louis Laguerre and other painters worked on both the church and the house.[3] The mausoleum is also remarkable for wall-paintings, in this case by Gaetano Brunetti.[2]

The organ and the Handel connection

Handel was employed by Brydges in 1717/18 as his composer-in-residence. This resulted in a number of works including the "Chandos Anthems" (settings of texts from the psalms for use in the Anglican liturgy).

Plaque

The church is believed to be where the Chandos Anthems were first performed. At the east end of the church is the organ assumed to have been played by Handel. Having been modernised over the years, it was reconstructed in 1994 by Goetze and Gwynn, a firm specialising in pre-Victorian organs. The surviving parts of the original 1716 single-manual instrument were used as the reference point.[4]

See also

References

Coordinates: 51°36′30″N 0°17′22″W / 51.60838°N 0.28931°W / 51.60838; -0.28931

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